Chapter
1 1 | are soon passed, and by four o’clock the rapid current
2 XV | afloat.~Towards half-past four in the morning the curtain
3 XIX | hole was not much less than four feet square, and was situated
4 XX | at the handspikes, and at four o’clock in the afternoon
5 XX | be at twenty minutes past four, and at ten minutes before
6 XXI | hour at low water and that four tides must ebb before the
7 XXIII| DECEMBER 2nd and 3rd.—For four hours we have succeeded
8 XXV | The space to which these four people are limited is necessarily
9 XXVI | moon had been up ever since four in the afternoon, though
10 XXVII| for a few hours, when at four o’clock in the morning,
11 XXXII| at the rate of three or four miles an hour. If they are
12 XXXIX| replied that it was now four days since the biscuit had
13 XXXIX| the biscuit had failed.~“Four days,” he repeated; “well,
14 XLII | attempt to slake our thirst four times in the day, instead
15 XLIV | as the creature was about four fathoms from the raft, the
16 XLVII| into ravenous brutes.~The four of us who sickened at the
17 XLIX | hunger or thirst; but for the four of us who had tasted nothing,
18 LIII | remaining chance; it was still four to one in my favour.~M.
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